Results 1,761 to 1,770 of 11477
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December 2nd, 2012 11:36 AM #1761
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December 2nd, 2012 12:40 PM #1762
Getting really dark here in QC.
Looks like my car will remain dirty for an additional week or two. This weekend isn't just worth a "carwash-weekend" :D
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December 2nd, 2012 12:52 PM #1764
Lakas na ng ulan dito in QC.
Lifted off from ANC Alerts' Twitter
Typhoon Bopha will bring heavy-intense rains (20-30mm). PAGASA: "Maghanda, maghanda, maghanda."
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December 2nd, 2012 01:39 PM #1765
Had my car washed some two weeks or so ago. I got sick for the last five days so it was only this morning that I got the car washed again. Ayun, pagdating ko ng bahay, nagdilim na ang kalangitan. Right now, malakas na ambon dito sa amin. Haaay, it never fails talaga. You just had to grin and bear it. Huhu. #Typhoon Bopha.
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December 2nd, 2012 01:54 PM #1767
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December 2nd, 2012 02:46 PM #1768
slight drizzle lasting less than 15 mins about an hour ago. Here at malate area.
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December 2nd, 2012 03:02 PM #1769
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December 2nd, 2012 04:28 PM #1770
Yung Palau unang makakatikim kay Bopha...hope they can get through it.
Oceania TV News: Palau is Set to Get Lashed By A “One in A Million” Typhoon
Written by By Kassi Berg - Oceaniatv.net Sunday, 02 December 2012 16:28
Palau -The air that now blankets Palau is warm, dry, still, and disturbingly ominous. Palau’s sky has reason to brood for in less than 24 hours Typhoon Bopha is predicted to make landfall on the tiny nation of the Republic of Palau with a near direct hit. This typhoon has been securing strength and intensity while at sea and is expected to be a monster typhoon with a violent entry.
As of 4am on December 2, 2012, this typhoon is predicted to sustain 150-mph winds and 180-mph gusts when it reaches Palau on early morning Monday. If that were not enough, storm force winds extend out from the center to 120 miles and maximum wave height is now estimated at 48 feet.
Typhoon Bopha defies all parameters with intense rainfall, huge diameters and fierce, harnessed winds. Yet, what makes Typhoon Bopha a “typhoon in a million” is that it has developed five-degrees from the equator, an area which is covered by the “Coriolis force.” The Coriolis effect forces a counterclockwise rotation for all storms in the Northern Hemisphere (storms south of the equator rotate clockwise). According to Wikpedia, since records began, only thirteen tropical cyclones have ever existed between 5°N and 5°S of the equator.
Palau lies on the edge of the typhoon belt and has never seen a typhoon of this magnitude.